Fearless: The Collection of Hester Diamond Part II
Fearless: The Collection of Hester Diamond Part II
Lot Closed
January 29, 07:02 PM GMT
Estimate
4,000 - 6,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Complete Slice Of A Seymchan Meteorite — Extraterrestrial Gemstones In Natural Metallic Matrix
Magadan District, Russia (62°54' N, 152°26' E)
Overall size 26.0 x 17.5 x 0.3 cm. This polished slice reveals a dense concentration of translucent to transparent brownish yellow to yellow green olivine within the highly lustrous and attractive nickel-iron base which shows complex crystallization. Especially attractive when properly backlit to highlight the olivine. With stand.
Pallasites represent less than 0.2% of all known meteorites and are widely considered the most beautiful extraterrestrial substance known. Like the vast majority of pallasitic meteorites, Seymchan originated from the core-mantle boundary of an asteroid that broke apart during early solar system history. Following pinball-like impacts, a large mass was serendipitously bumped into an Earth-crossing orbit.
The crystals seen here are the result of small chunks of the stony mantle becoming suspended in the molten metal of an asteroid’s iron-nickel core. Cut and polished, the lustrous metallic matrix features silicate crystals of gleaming olivine and peridot (gem-quality olivine) ranging in hues from emerald to amber. The metallic latticework in which the gemstones are set is referred to as a Widmanstätten pattern. It is the result of a slow cooling that provided sufficient time — millions of years — for the two metallic alloys to orient into their crystalline habit. As the only place where this can happen is in the vacuum of space (and also, theoretically at Earth’s own core-mantle boundary), the appearance of this pattern is diagnostic in the identification of a meteorite.